Ep 134 | Moses 1; Abraham 3, Come Follow Me (December 27-January 2)

Talking Scripture - A podcast by Mike Day & Bryce Dunford - Mercoledì

Show Notes Enroll in Institute Timestamps: 00:26 – The book of Moses is the JST of Genesis. Moses 1 is the missing preface to the Old Testament. The word translation has multiple meanings. 06:25 – We are God’s children, beings with infinite worth and potential. 09:42 – The Old Testament was originally written in Hebrew and many words can have various interpretations. 13:13 – Divine investiture of authority allows the Son to have the power to speak as if he is the Father. 19:19 – The creation story is not about how. It’s about why. Man is nothing and yet God wants to give us everything He has. 22:39 – The historical timeframe of Moses 1. 25:34 – Satan’s name only appears in the Bible 13 times. His presence in the Book of Moses is significant. 29:21 – The difference between the glory of God and the glory of the world. 35:17 – We can cast out Satan and control darkness by inviting light. 37:53 – Moses 1 ends with the command to show the words only to those that believe. Levels of exoteric and esoteric doctrine is contained in scriptural texts. 41:22 – The book of Abraham originated with Egyptian papyri that Joseph Smith translated. Fire destroyed most of the original scrolls and only small fragments remain. These fragments, called JSP I-XI, contain burial texts called The Book of Breathings. 47:25 – The relationship between the remaining fragments and the text of the Book of Abraham is not fully understood. 49:59 – Some counter-arguments to criticisms of the Book of Abraham include the missing text theory, the catalyst theory, and the Jewish redaction theory. 57:03 – The JSP I-XI fragments date to the 2nd century BCE, not 1900 BCE when Abraham lived. The rolls were likely copies of copies. 1:02:49 – In the Book of Abraham, the greatness of the Messiah is found in the symbolism of the cosmos and stars. 1:12:20 – Abraham learns about the pre-earth life. 1:13:38 – Joseph’s introduction to the Hebrew language likely influenced some of the words found in Abraham. Listen on Apple Podcasts Listen on Google Podcasts Listen on Audible Listen on Facebook Listen on Stitcher Listen On Spotify Listen on 

Visit the podcast's native language site